mobius Future Racing to take on USA’s best before Subaru NRS

The men’s peloton will begin the 2017 Subaru National Road Series (NRS) at the Battle on the Border later this month, with 2016 team’s runner-up mobius Future Racing set to get to taste the best of both worlds with a split-squad to tackle a challenging Australian domestic and US race schedule.

mobius Future Racing has received invitations from some of North America’s most prestigious races including the UCI 2.2 Tour of the Gila, The Tour of Redlands and the Dana Point Grand Prix.

All three races feature on the US National Racing Calendar (NRC) and will provide exposure to the top level of racing available on the US domestic circuit.

“We’ve spent the past two seasons concentrating on establishing the team domestically and I feel like we’ve done that,” said mFR General Manager, Tom Petty, who is understandably excited by the opportunity.

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Our Story (short version)

Established in 1994 and named after the topology of the Möbius loop, mobius has grown to a full service agency focusing on marketing and design solutions.

The Möbius loop was designed in 1858 by Augustus Ferdinand Möbius to illustrate the theory of infinity. It is where the perfect marriage of science and art can be illustrated, a loop of infinite proportions and endless possibilities.

Our clients are some of the best and biggest in their fields reaching across a variety of industry and service. Because of this diversity we think laterally to offer unique marketing and strategic solutions.

Let ∞ denote infinity

With calculus, infinity came into its own. Whether you were doing differential calculus and considering infinitesimally small increments, or integral claculus and adding together an infinite set of infinitely narrow segments, infinity was a working tool of the mathematician.

And it needed a symbol.

As it happens, one had just been produced, the lemniscate, ∞. That drunken figure of eight now used to represent infinity was introduced in a work on conic sections by John Wallis, the man behind the formula for π, who would be significantly more famous today if he hadn’t had so many glorious colleagues.